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Businessmen: From Free Traders to Vile Courtiers?

By Pierre Lemieux | Jan 13 2025
One would think that businessmen should easily understand the importance of trade. Some certainly do who are trying to lobby President-elect Donald Trump not to follow through on his protectionist threats (“CEOs Want Trump to Change Course on Tariffs. He Isn’t Budging,” Wall Street Journal, December 15, 2024). They seem to be defending their freedom ...

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The Beauty of Trade, Again

By Pierre Lemieux | Jan 5 2025

If you urgently want a product from somewhere in the free world and you are willing to pay the price, the worst “shortage” you will experience is the cost of flying there or hiring a “personal shopper.” As I previously wrote in response to an EconLog comment, “if you were willing to pay and you .. MORE

Featured Comment

In countries with governments as functional and more expensive than America you would be suprised of how difficult is that the goverment vacate your house if it has been occupied by a third party. Never,..

Jose Pablo, January 14

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International Trade

My Weekly Reading for January 19, 2025

By David Henderson | Jan 19, 2025 | 0

  Regulations Keep Millions of Bedrooms Empty During a Housing Crisis by Howard Husock, Reason, January 17, 2025. Excerpts: The U.S. is facing a housing affordability crisis, and new data from Realtor.comhighlight an often missed contributing factor: millions of empty bedrooms. Census data reveal 31.8 million “excess” bedrooms in American homes—compared to just 4 million .. MORE

Macroeconomics

Greedflation in Turkey? How about greedspending?

By Scott Sumner | Jan 18, 2025 | 2

It turns out that “greedflation” is not just an American misconception, the same fallacy exists in many other countries.  Kürşad Görgen has a blog discussing Turkish monetary policy issues, from a market monetarist perspective.  Last year, he did a post discussing some rather unconventional views: After the 2023 elections, Turkey abandoned its infamous NeoFisherian interest .. MORE

Economic Education

Financial Education and Economic Development

By Omar Hernandez | Jan 18, 2025 | 7

Financial education is an essential component for the economic and social development of nations. In an increasingly interconnected world, understanding how personal finances and markets operate is an indispensable skill for individuals and economies alike. However, in countries like Colombia, the lack of financial education negatively impacts financial inclusion, investment, and economic growth. From a .. MORE

Political Economy

Government Junk Fees

By Pierre Lemieux | Jan 18, 2025 | 9

The FTC is rumored to be preparing legal action against Greystar, the largest landlord in the US, for “hidden fees”, also called “junk fees” (“FTC Prepares to Sue Largest U.S. Apartment Landlord Over Hidden Fees,” Wall Street Journal, January 13, 2025): The FTC finalized its hidden-fees rule last month and said it would seek civil .. MORE

History of Economic Thought

A Coase Story about Gambling

By David Henderson | Jan 17, 2025 | 19

Fellow economist Susan Woodward sent me this anecdote about Ronald Coase and gambling that I thought worth sharing. It led me to remember my own interesting story about gambling and one famous economist. Bob Hall [her husband] and I were talking about the 1987 Coase conference at Yale, which I attended but Bob did not. I .. MORE

Adam Smith

The Wielders of One-Bladed Scissors

By Kevin Corcoran | Jan 17, 2025 | 8

The title of this post is a nod to Alfred Marshall, who stressed that supply and demand analysis required we think about “both blades of the scissors.” Prices are not set by supply or demand alone – it is the interaction between the two that is crucial. It is for this reason Greg Mankiw once .. MORE

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Bloggers David Henderson, Alberto Mingardi, Scott Sumner, Pierre Lemieux, Kevin Corcoran, and guests write on topical economics of interest to them, illuminating subjects from politics and finance, to recent films and cultural observations, to history and literature.

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Book Club

Adam Smith

Democracy for Liberal People: Part 2 0

Inclusion and openness In Part 1, I wrote about Don Lavoie’s argument that robust liberalism requires open (democratic) politics that can make useful the tacit, dispersed knowledge of voters’ “interests, concerns, and demands to provide governance structures that people will use to resolve political disagreements peacefully.” Liberalism requires open democracy just as it requires open .. MORE

Competition

My Weekly Reading and Viewing for January 12, 2025 11

Age-Verification Laws are a Verified Mistake by Corbin K. Barthold, Law & Liberty, January 9, 2025. Excerpt: Now legislators, both state and federal, are going the other way. They’re introducing, supporting, and (only, so far, at the state level) enacting bills that impose age-verification requirements on social media platforms and adult websites. Current online age-verification .. MORE

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

Mutz, Caplan, and Anti-Foreign Bias 8

In Bryan Caplan’s book The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies, he outlines four biases impacting how most voters think about economics. One of the biases he identifies is anti-foreign bias – the tendency of voters to become especially pessimistic about the economic impact of dealing with foreigners. A recent book by .. MORE

Book Reviews and Suggested Readings

Rights, Restrictions, and Reality: 50 Years of Anarchy, State, and Utopia

By Aeon Skoble

Robert Nozick’s Anarchy, State, and Utopia was released in 1974, shortly after (and partly in response to) his Harvard colleague John Rawls’ 1971 A Theory of Justice. Anarchy, State, and Utopia included a theory of rights and a right-based account of liberalism in the classic tradition, which offered an alternative not only to Rawls’ progressive .. MORE

A Pro-Market and Pro-Social Economy

By Brent Orrell and David Veldran

Book Review of The Next American Economy: Nation, State, and Markets in an Uncertain World, by Samuel Gregg.1 In The Next American Economy (2022), Samuel Gregg provides a refreshing defense of free markets, emphasizing the need to frame the case for economic liberty within a broader narrative about America’s values and identity. We need this .. MORE

The Pre-Modern Order

By Arnold Kling

Pre-industrial society was characterized by low degrees of economic, political and cultural integration. By contrast, a high degree of integration in all three respects is the hallmark of modernity… Economically, modernity breeds integration by its systematic division of labour. All members of modern society specialize in a single economic activity, offering their labour, skill or .. MORE

Mises and Buchanan on Classical Liberalism versus Socialism

By Alejandra Salinas

Ludwig von Mises The works of Ludwig von Mises and James M. Buchanan reflect the best of the classical liberal intellectual tradition. Given the centenary of the publication of Mises’ Socialism,1 and since 2023 marked the tenth anniversary of the passing of Buchanan, it seems an excellent time to remember their contributions. Both defend methodological .. MORE

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